The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
Car accidentsplain-lynx-561

I keep staring at the crash scene photos and now I'm questioning everything I remember

I don't really know where to start with this. It's been about eighteen months since the accident and I've mostly been keeping my head down dealing with the physical recovery and the ongoing insurance mess. But lately I've been going back through the photos I took at the scene right after it happened — I think I took maybe thirty or forty of them while I was still in shock, just instinctively documenting everything.

Here's the thing that's messing with me: I've been staring at a few of them lately and I'm noticing details I completely missed the first time around. There's something in the background of one shot — a skid mark pattern — that looks totally different from what I described in my original statement to the adjuster. Like, the angle seems off from what I remembered.

I know memory is unreliable after trauma, my therapist has told me this a hundred times. But seeing something in a photo that contradicts what I thought I remembered is a really unsettling feeling. Part of me wonders if it even matters at this point since the claim is technically settled, but another part of me feels like I owe it to myself to understand exactly what happened that night.

Has anyone else gone back through their documentation way after the fact and felt this kind of thing? Like the photos tell a slightly different story than the one you've been carrying around in your head? I'm not even sure what I'm looking for by posting this — maybe just to hear that it's normal to keep processing these things long after you think you've moved on.

Also — should I even be looking at these photos alone? Is that doing more harm than good at this point?

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 21
    daring-marmot-303

    Yes, absolutely normal. I went back through my dashcam footage about a year after my accident and completely broke down because I noticed something I'd never caught before — the other driver's brake lights never came on. I'd been second-guessing myself for months thinking maybe I could've reacted faster, and there it was on video the whole time. It's a lot to process when the evidence and your memory don't line up. You're not alone in this.

    • 12
      genuine-seal-495

      From a documentation standpoint, it's actually worth noting what you're seeing even if the claim is settled. Jot down the specific photo, what you're noticing, and why it catches your attention. If there's any possibility of reopening anything — some settlements have timeframes that haven't fully closed depending on your state and the specifics — having your own notes about inconsistencies could matter. Not saying you have a case to reopen, just that documenting your observations costs you nothing.

    • 16
      mellow-marten-672

      If the skid mark pattern looks different from what you described to the adjuster, that's not a small thing. Adjusters use scene evidence to establish fault percentages, and if the physical evidence actually contradicts how fault got assigned, that's worth at least a conversation with an attorney. I'd be cautious about just filing this away mentally and moving on.

    • 8
      curious-commuter644

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 15
    swift-hare-468

    Please be gentle with yourself about looking at those photos solo. Trauma has a way of storing itself in fragments, and revisiting graphic or stressful imagery — even without realizing it's graphic — can retriggger your nervous system in ways that sneak up on you. If you have a therapist already, bring the photos to a session rather than sitting with them alone at midnight. That's not weakness, it's just smart recovery.

    • 10
      clever-marmot-628

      I just want to say — the fact that you're still processing this a year and a half later is completely okay. There's no timeline for this stuff. Be kind to yourself. 💙

  • 11
    brave-raven-350

    Not legal advice, but I'd say this: memory inconsistency after traumatic accidents is extremely well-documented and courts and attorneys deal with it all the time. If you've settled, the path forward depends entirely on the release language you signed and your state's laws. Some situations allow for reopening, most don't. Worth a free consultation just to understand where you stand before you either worry yourself to death or dismiss something that actually matters.

  • 7
    gentle-swift-304

    When you say the skid mark pattern looks different — different how exactly? Like it suggests the other car was traveling at a different angle than reported, or something else? I'm not doubting you, I just think it matters a lot what specifically looks off before jumping to conclusions about what it means for your case or your memory.

    • 6
      plainspoken-overpass615

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 22
    quiet-kestrel-740

    I used to work on the claims side and honestly, scene photos get reviewed pretty superficially in a lot of standard claims — adjusters are managing huge caseloads. Details that seem significant to you, like skid mark angles or debris patterns, sometimes don't get the attention they deserve during the initial review. That doesn't mean it's too late to have someone with actual accident reconstruction experience look at what you're seeing.

    • 10
      careful-neighbor562

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 19
    brave-crow-159

    For what it's worth — the fact that you had the presence of mind to take that many photos right after the accident, even in shock, means you actually gave yourself options. A lot of people have nothing to go back to. Whatever you end up doing with them, you did the right thing by documenting.